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View Full Version : From Velo news on tour of Spain 2011 on Climbing El Angiro


cnighbor1
09-06-2011, 06:54 PM
From Velo news on tour of spain 2011

With 24% at some pitches on El Angliro pros rode lower gearing than normal (see below)

I ride up Mt diablo in 30T x 28T (32.3-inch) but I can't handle last 17% grade at top

I wonder what Cobo used for a rear derailleur. Must have been at least a medium cage RD

Charles Nighbor at 75

"LEON, Spain (VN) — Gear ratios proved decisive in the battle up the Angliru on Sunday.

Juanjo Cobo (Geox-TMC) was one of the few GC riders who rode 34×32 (a 28.3-inch gear) up the steep grades, which topped 24 percent on some ramps.

Most of the other GC favorites rode tougher gearing that later did not give them the same pedal speed that Cobo was able to generate on the steepest ramps.

“We chose those gear ratios because we knew that the ramps were so steep it was important to be able to keep a high cadence,” said Geox-TMC sport director Matxin Fernández. “You could see that Cobo was more agile on the pedals and I believe that made a difference.”

Some Angliru gearing
Cobo 34×32 (28.3-inch);
Nibali 34×29 (31.2-inch);
Froome and Wiggins 38×32 (31.6-inch);
Kessiakoff 34×28 (32.3-inch);
Fuglsang and Mollema 36×28 (34.2-inch);
(gear inch explanation)

A preview of bikes before the start of Sunday’s stage revealed the following selections among some of the GC contenders: Nibali 34×29 (31.2-inch); Kessiakoff 34×28 (32.3-inch); Fuglsang and Mollema, both 36×28 (34.2-inch).

Team Sky’s Chris Froome said Monday that in hindsight he would have changed his gear ratio to something easier than his 38×32 (31.6-inch).

Sky uses the asymmetrical front chain, which Froome said changes the dynamic, but said he would have liked to have had an extra gear or two to take on Cobo.

“We could have used smaller gears yesterday,” Froome said. “Even with different gearing, it’s never going to be easy when it’s 23 percent. We hadn’t seen the climb before, but all the guys were talking about it. We all knew it was going to challenging.”

Sky teammate Bradley Wiggins also rode 38×32, but said it was his preference to have lower gearing when you’re at the sharp end of the action.

“I rode 38×32, that was perfect for the speed we were racing at the front. If you were in the gruppetto, just trying to get up the thing, you might want easier gearing,” Wiggins said Monday. “The climb wasn’t as brutal as I imagined it. The race passes quicker when you’re racing up it and trying hard. The only other experience was the Zoncolan in the Giro. When you’re focused and concentrating, the time passes quicker. Before you knew it, it was 1km to go and we were almost up it.”

Wiggins explained that at one point he nearly fell over as he struggled up the steepest part of the Angliru.

“The crowds were really deep in places on the steeper bits and you need all the road to sway from side to side. It’s just as much about staying upright on the bike,” he said. “At one time, a flag got wrapped around my brake lever. Fortunately, it released. I thought I was going to go down. That’s what’s so great about the sport is that the public can get so close to the spectacle.”


<http://velonews.competitor.com/2011/09/vuelta-a-espana/vuelta-tech-gear-ratios-critical-up-the-angliru_191093>